Rangers have no answers for Devils in dismal Game Five shutout loss that puts them on the brink

It started innocently enough. On what was a routine defensive draw cleanly won by Vincent Trocheck, the puck took a funny bounce off Igor Shesterkin. It then went right to Ondrej Palat for a wrist shot that deflected off Adam Fox and sailed over a helpless Shesterkin into the net at 39 seconds.

That fluke goal gave the Devils an early lead that they wouldn’t relinquish. Even though they didn’t play badly in an exciting first period, the Rangers were unable to beat Akira Schmid. He made eight of 23 saves en route to the first postseason shutout of his young career.

After the road team took the first four games of the Battle of Hudson, this one went to the home side. Playing another complete game that included strong defensive work and checking, the Devils won Game Five over the Rangers 4-0 before a much louder Prudential Center.

By winning their third straight game of the series, the Devils now lead the first round match-up three games to two. They have gotten off the mat by sweeping two at MSG and then methodically outplaying a fragile opponent who’s searching for confidence.

From my vantage point, it looks like the Rangers are having a mental breakdown. They don’t have any answers for Schmid, who’s come on to win three consecutive starts. Astonishingly, he’s only allowed two goals on 82 shots. That’s put him in an exclusive class that even includes Hall Of Famer Tiny Thompson.

Whether or not the Rangers have done a good job testing the Swiss maestro, that’s debatable. Unlike Game Four, when they were flat, they did create some good scoring chances on the rookie netminder. However, Schmid flashed the leather to rob Artemi Panarin of a goal. He also denied Mika Zibanejad on a one-timer clocked at 94 miles per hour.

“The boys are playing phenomenal in front of me. It’s not a lot of work for me,” the Devils winning goalie said in the locker room.

There was also the big glove save on Kaapo Kakko. He kept the puck out during a wild sequence where the Rangers couldn’t figure out how they didn’t score. If they weren’t already frustrated, it looks like they have an Akira Schmid problem. He is now in their heads. How can he not be? The goalie has come in and provided stability for Lindy Ruff, who looks like a genius.

Ruff changed up his second line by moving the gritty Erik Haula and playoff clutch Ondrej Palat next to Jack Hughes. That’s paid off. Hughes didn’t score in this one, but his line did. Palat scored his 50th career postseason goal.

Haula had a huge goal at the end of a power play that made it a two-goal deficit for the Rangers. He also had a nifty set up on a backbreaking Dawson Mercer shorthanded goal. For good measure, Haula sealed it with an empty netter for a three-point game.

Even on a night, Hughes missed wide on the weak side, which the Devils have exposed as the series has moved on, the Blueshirts were miserable. They fired blanks at Schmid, who only allowed one bad rebound. Of course, that was taken care of by his defense, which has outplayed the Rangers. There are many reasons they are facing playoff extinction in the first round. That’s one of them.

After starting on fire with six assists in the first two games, Adam Fox has been awful. He’s not played anywhere close to the hockey that’s made him one of the game’s best defensemen. Instead, he’s been taken away by a more aggressive Devils defense. When he isn’t, Fox is forcing passes that aren’t there. Take the very poor pass he made to Panarin on a key power play that handcuffed him.

Instead of taking advantage of Damon Severson’s gift following a dust up between Barclay Goodrow and the very effective Kevin Bahl, Fox’s poor decision allowed Haula and Mercer to come two-on-one. He made a perfect feed across for a shorthanded rocket from Mercer that increased the Rangers’ madness to three down with 6:28 left in a dizzying second period.

It really was all downhill following Mercer’s first career playoff goal. While the statistics said that the shots were even at 13 apiece, it didn’t feel like it. The Rangers made no progress at all with Schmid, who must be seeing the puck like a beach ball. He didn’t face much pressure aside from the Goodrow line that hasn’t done much in this series. But it isn’t their fault that the team has melted down.

Following a great glove save to rob Timo Meier, who still has as many points as Mika Zibanejad and Panarin have goals (0), an emotional Shesterkin skated over to the Rangers bench and yelled at the players to get going. He had every reason to be upset. He has gotten no support and dealt with way more Devils crashing his crease than Rangers attacking Schmid. A stark contrast.

The big question for the Rangers is, can they find their game by Saturday night to force a Game Seven. They really looked slow last night. It was like Wile E. Coyote chasing the Roadrunner. I’m not kidding. That’s how much faster and more dangerous the Devils look. They’re not only using their team speed to fuel the offense. But they’re also utilizing it to check and defend.

It was another quiet night for Chris Kreider. He only registered a single shot and finished a minus-two. Much credit goes to the overlooked defense pair of Ryan Graves and John Marino. They combined to block 11 shots. As a team, the Devils blocked 24. By comparison, the Rangers blocked 14. A complete role reversal from earlier in the series.

It’s the Jersey side that’s adjusted their style to play playoff hockey. That’s led to success for a younger team that’s one win away from their first series victory since 2012. Martin Brodeur was the goalie then as they made a run to the Stanley Cup Finals.

While the key players for the Devils continue to show up, the Rangers’ best have gone missing. You could put Fox, Patrick Kane, Kreider, Miller, Panarin, Vladimir Tarasenko, Vincent Trocheck, and Zibanejad on the back of a milk carton. They’ve been invisible. It’s hard to win a series when your top stars are struggling.

Even with Gerard Gallant refusing to adjust the key personnel on the power play, he eventually pulled the plug on his lines by mixing and matching. The problem was that it was already 3-0 when he moved Kakko up to the top line. Although Kakko created opportunities, he couldn’t put the puck in. He passed up a wide open shot for a low percentage attempt from Fox. He wasn’t alone.

You had Panarin stay with Trocheck and Tarasenko, while Kane was dropped to the third line with Filip Chytil and Alexis Lafreniere. Neither young player generated enough offensively. Along with Kakko, who’s been the most effective player of the trio, they’re putting in the effort, but it hasn’t been good enough. The 21 and over Kid Line hasn’t made a difference.

Instead, it’s the Devils getting secondary scoring from Haula, who’s been one of their best players. Even with Nico Hischier having no goals, he still has contributed three assists while playing defensively responsible hockey. He is over 50 percent on face-offs in the series.

Having centers who win draws helps. The Devils boast three, including Haula and checking pivot Mike McLeod. The Rangers haven’t been bad on face-offs. They were an even 23 up and 23 down in Game Five. Zibanejad went 9-for-14. Trocheck was 7-for-15. Chytil went 4-and-4.

The issue is that after lighting up Vitek Vanecek for nine goals in identical 5-1 wins during the first two games, they’ve only scored two goals over the last three games. Not coincidentally, they’ve all been losses to put them in a hole. If you’re counting, the other goal was into an open net. So, they got 10 goals in the first 120 minutes of the series. They’ve had only a pair since over the last three games.

It’s hard to put into words what’s happened to the offense. The organization went out and acquired both Tarasenko and Kane to go for it. Although both had good moments early in the series, they’ve turned into ghosts since. It’s like the team has a bad case of Akira Schmid-itis.

The best three defensemen have been Jacob Trouba, Braden Schneider, and Niko Mikkola. That isn’t hyperbole. Neither Fox nor Ryan Lindgren have been particularly good. Miller has done little. That’s supposed to be the young defenseman the Rangers might extend for over five million per year. He’s been frequently caught out of position and not contributing offensively.

You have Lafreniere with a goose egg in his fourth series. While Gallant has liked his physical play, he’s not doing enough offensively. As for Chytil, he had a promising start but has disappeared. It’s no different than the top guns.

Unless Zibanejad, Panarin, and Kreider can get going in Game Six along with Fox, the Rangers season could end on home ice in excruciating fashion. Even worse, it would come versus their bitter Hudson rival.

As Gallant noted during the postgame, this team has been here before. They trailed the Penguins and Hurricanes three games to two in the first two rounds before rallying to advance. The biggest difference is that they haven’t solved Schmid. It isn’t like facing a third stringer or Antti Raanta. Schmid is bigger and plays much calmer. He’s also getting a lot of help, which he praised in the interview above.

Can the Rangers dig deep to force Game Seven? Only if their best players finally show up. If they don’t, no lineup changes will matter. They have to get to Schmid early in Game Six. There has to be more of a willingness to make life difficult for him. It can’t be all perimeter without enough traffic.

The Rangers must also give the fans a reason to get excited. Right now, plenty of loyal fans are doubting them. Does this roster have the right mix to pull off what last year’s did? That one had a healthier balance. Sometimes, the sexy moves don’t always work. We’re about to find out either way.

There’s nothing more to say. Either they rise up or go home in embarrassing fashion.

Posted in Battle Of Hudson, Column, Devils, NHL Playoffs, NYRangers | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Rangers adjust struggling top power play unit, Zibanejad looks to get on track with the series up for grabs

With an extra day to prepare for a pivotal Game Five, the Rangers made an adjustment to the struggling top power play unit.

In the first two games of the first round series against the Hudson rival Devils, they went 4-for-7. That led to identical 5-1 blowout wins in Newark. However, when the Battle of Hudson shifted to Manhattan, the Devils adjusted their penalty killing unit by being more aggressive.

The end result was an unproductive 0-for-8 in consecutive losses at MSG. While they generated some good looks in a 2-1 overtime defeat in Game Three, that wasn’t the case on Monday. They went 0-for-3 with four power play shots. None, which made Akira Schmid work. He won his second straight start by making a routine 22 saves.

Now, the series is tied at two apiece. Both teams had an extra day off. After indicating he wouldn’t adjust much yesterday, Rangers coach Gerard Gallant did alter his key top five-on-four unit.

As expected, Mika Zibanejad was back in the left circle. An area where he did plenty of damage during the regular season. He finished third with 20 power play goals. Many came on his lethal one-timer from that off wing. Of his team-leading 39 goals, 19 were on one-timers. A statistic MSG Network analyst Steve Valiquette provided.

With Zibanejad still without a goal through the first four games, he needs to get on track. This isn’t unfamiliar territory for the top center. During last year’s first round series against the Penguins, he didn’t have a goal in the first five games. However, he flipped the script by scoring three goals over the final two games to help the Blueshirts complete a comeback from three games to one down.

Zibanejad was very candid in a postgame interview with New York Post columnist Larry Brooks. The recently turned 30-year old understands his importance to the team’s success. But he doesn’t want to change his overall game either. He is a responsible two-way pivot who plays all three zones. He had some interesting thoughts following the Game Four disappointment.

“You and I have talked at different times this year about what I learned going through that, and what I know is that I can’t let the fact that I haven’t scored get into my head,” Zibanejad told Brooks after Game Four. “I can’t let that change the rest of my game that is also important.

“If it were up to me, I would have seven goals by now. Obviously I’m frustrated. I’m not happy. I know this is part of my job and I know that questions arise about it when we are losing. But I can’t dwell on that and I can’t dwell on me. It’s all about us.”

He also made sure to point out what the Devils did better to even the series. The Rangers weren’t as sharp at home. They had a combined 34 giveaways in the two losses. Way too much to be successful. Puck management will be crucial for them to bounce back and take Game Five.

“I think we feed into what the Devils are able to do,” Zibanejad said. “We obviously didn’t start well. There’s been bad execution. I don’t think we got up to the level of play we wanted to and needed.”

By making smarter decisions with the puck, they can limit turnovers in the neutral zone that fuel the Devils dangerous transition. Their speed was much more noticeable at The Garden. Especially during Game Four. They’re the faster team. The Rangers can ill afford to trade chances with their bitter Hudson rival. They must slow the tempo down.

“For me, yes, I want to score to help the team,” Zibanejad added on his offensive struggles. He has two assists. “Last year, I didn’t score until Game 6, so I am familiar with this situation. The next couple of days, I have to look to see what I can do to be more effective, to get into better position to get the puck to the net and to create. I have to trust myself.”

By moving Zibanejad back to his office on the power play, that should give the Rangers a better chance. Artemi Panarin, who’s also without a goal, was shifted to the right circle. An area that saw him score the memorable overtime winner in Game Seven to beat the Pens.

Obviously, Gallant isn’t going to deviate from the personnel that started red hot. The five-man unit of Zibanejad, Chris Kreider, Panarin, Patrick Kane, and Adam Fox had plenty of early success in Games One and Two.

They will have to make better decisions with the puck due to the Devils pressuring Fox at the point and taking away Kreider in front. They’re capable of making backdoor plays utilizing Kreider, who can then set up a cutting Zibanejad.

The Rangers are 0 for their last 11 on the man-advantage. So, that must change. Special teams have been a key all season.

That said, they’ll also need to be better at five-on-five. The Devils played a smart defensive game by taking away time and space to create turnovers. The Blueshirts will have to be more concise. Take a page from Gallant by chipping pucks in. It can’t always be the fancy plays. At this time of year, they have to do what it takes to win.

It’s all about execution. We’ll have a better idea tomorrow night.

Posted in Column, NYRangers | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Missing stars costing Rangers in deadlocked series with pesky Devils

If I told you before the series that neither Mika Zibanejad nor Artemi Panarin would have a goal in the first four games of the first round, you probably would assume the Rangers were down. They aren’t yet but could be put on the playoff brink when the Battle of Hudson shifts back to Newark on Thursday.

That’s because the Devils flipped the script by sweeping the two games at MSG. They took Game Four convincingly by playing a complete game to shut down the Rangers in a quiet Garden – posting a well-deserved 3-1 road win to tie the series at two games apiece.

If Game Three was played on even terms before Jesper Bratt set up Dougie Hamilton in overtime, that wasn’t the case tonight. Outside of an early flurry from the 21 and Over Kid Line around Akira Schmid’s crease, the Rangers failed to show any urgency. They never put the hammer down.

“We didn’t show up tonight. We didn’t compete hard enough,” a pointed Gerard Gallant said following his team’s lackluster showing in a big game. He also hammered home other points about throwing pucks away in the middle and not chipping it against a more stingy Devils defense.

The turning point actually came on that extended shift from Kaapo Kakko, Alexis Lafreniere, and Filip Chytil. They had the Devils pinned in for a while but didn’t score. After Kakko tested Schmid, Lafreniere missed on a tip-in.

Then, Jonas Siegenthaler made a defensive play that swung the momentum. In what amounted to a desperate play, he backhanded the loose puck out of the zone. Remarkably, it took a Devils’ bounce right to Jack Hughes, who got behind Ryan Lindgren and Adam Fox.

There was no catching Hughes as he moved in and patiently waited before making his deke and tucking in a forehand just by Igor Shesterkin to give the Devils a 1-0 lead at 2:50.

Talk about a sudden change. They went from Lafreniere nearly tipping in the Fox point shot to Siegenthaler, making the crucial clear right onto Hughes’ stick for his third of the series less than three minutes in. That silenced the majority sellout crowd.

It was exactly the kind of start the Rangers couldn’t afford. It took the crowd out of it early. Although there was still plenty of time left, it was the Devils who set the tone. Playing more aggressively throughout, they took it to their close Manhattan rival. Whether it was using their speed to create scoring chances or finishing checks, they played much better than the previous three games.

Hughes would get another dangerous opportunity due to his game-breaking speed. He found more space to get off a tough shot from the slot area that Shesterkin stopped. He was quite good in this one, leading all skaters with five shots. This looked more like the player who set a Devils franchise record with 99 points.

While Hughes found time and space to make plays, Mika Zibanejad was nowhere to be seen. He was a ghost. Whether it’s due to the match-up, he couldn’t do anything offensively. In fact, the leading goalscorer only registered a measly shot in the third period that looked like a beach ball.

Zibanejad’s struggles were unexpected. He only has two assists in four games. Even when the Devils gifted the Rangers three power plays, including two in the first period, Zibanejad never got a shot on goal.

It doesn’t help that Artemi Panarin is not scoring either. A player who came in playing well, the Bread Man hasn’t scored a goal yet. In Game Three, he missed three great opportunities, including a pair on a power play with less than five minutes left in regulation. There was also the missed breakaway. It hasn’t been a good series for Panarin. He only has two helpers. Both came in the 5-1 blowout during Game One.

You at least notice him. It just isn’t happening. On the other hand, Zibanejad is the engine that drives the Rangers’ offense. He can’t be this ineffective. Credit the Devils for doing a better job checking him and Chris Kreider, who also had a quiet game. He at least had a hand in setting up Vincent Trocheck’s rebound goal at 1:51 into the third period.

However, Kreider found it much harder to get to shots in front. He was paid closer attention to by the Devils defense. They crowded him and limited rebounds when Schmid was letting them out. He was shaky. However, the diligent checking from his teammates was the difference. They’re doing a better job playing in front of the 22-year old rookie.

Even when they got a power play due to Hamilton catching Trocheck up high with his stick, they couldn’t score on the five-on-four. Suddenly, that huge edge has disappeared.

The Devils have adjusted their penalty kill by being more aggressive up top. Fox doesn’t have as much time to operate. They are winning more battles and clearing pucks. Those hustle plays are momentum killers for a top unit that did whatever it wanted, scoring four times in the first two games.

Timo Meier, who has had his own struggles on the Jersey side, took a very lazy delay of game to hand the Rangers a second straight power play. They never had a chance. Instead, a rare Kreider deflection missed. Then, Vladimir Tarasenko took down Erik Haula to end the man-advantage.

It was frustrating. They out-shot the Devils 10-8. But anyone who watched closely knew better. This wasn’t the same effort from the players in the Blueshirt jerseys during identical 5-1 wins in Newark. Maybe it came too easy. Did they really expect the Devils to go with a tail between their legs?

The lack of killer instinct was really felt during a dismal second period. Not only were they anemic offensively. They also were getting beat on face-offs. There was more sloppy play. Due to more Devils’ pressure, they threw pucks away. For a second consecutive game, they had double digits in giveaways finishing with 15. That included some of their best players. It was ugly.

Shesterkin kept them in the game with a few timely saves. That included a key stop on Hughes early in the second. His best save came in the third when the game became a rollercoaster.

Another problem is that they continue to miss the net. Jacob Trouba had another good opportunity but sent a shot wide. He also absorbed a tough hit. One of the few times the captain was on the receiving end. The Devils have finished more checks in the past two games. A more controlled aggression has made a difference.

Gallant continued to keep Panarin in the left circle while Zibanejad worked more in the slot during the three power failures. That experiment has to go. The Devils have it figured out.

Even with Kakko driving play during most of his shifts and drawing a holding minor on Curtis Lazar, he saw fewer than thirteen minutes of ice time. He was the most noticeable Ranger. Even if he was only credited with one shot on goal in three attempts, he was active. Would it have killed the coach to reward Kakko with a power play shift or extra shifts at even strength?

Another difference was the Devils’ ability to create more forecheck pressure. They spent some time in the Rangers’ end. Even their checking line comprised of Lazar, Jesper Boqvist, and Dawson Mercer had a couple of strong shifts.

On the final power play, it was so bad that they allowed Haula to get a clean breakaway. He just missed scoring shorthanded. It was pitiful.

Lafreniere had one of the best chances. On a good play off the rush, Kakko got the puck over for him. But instead of going to a backhand, he tried a low percentage forehand that went wide. It was too hard an angle. As hard as he’s worked in the four games, Lafreniere is without a point. They need him to contribute.

The Rangers were held to six shots in the second. Half produced juicy rebounds, including a backhand try from Kane. Schmid thought he had it, but it went off the goalpost with the loose puck cleared away. Tarasenko had a long wrist shot that Schmid had trouble with. There weren’t enough bodies in front. Another area Gallant wasn’t happy with.

With nothing happening, he made a switch to his top two lines. Kane and Kreider went down to play with Trocheck. Panarin and Tarasenko moved onto the Zibanejad line. It provided an initial spark. That was the only positive from a lifeless game.

On a face-off, Kane sent a pass for a Kreider backhand shot that Schmid leaked out. That allowed Trocheck to clean up the rebound to get his first goal of the series at 1:42 into the third period.

The crowd erupted. They hadn’t had much reason to get excited. Following that tying goal, the Blueshirts picked up the physicality. They tried to turn it on.

The trouble was that the Devils weren’t cooperating. A strong response saw Meier and Hughes create chances that Shesterkin calmly handled to get a stoppage.

Trocheck had the best scoring chance. In transition following a Nico Hischier turnover, he fired high and over the top of the net. If he hits the net, it’s in.

On a good shift by the Devils, they reclaimed the lead, thanks to some good work in transition. Hamilton moved the puck for Hischier along the boards. He found a trailing Siegenthaler cutting in for a shot from the left circle that beat Shesterkin underneath his glove. It went off the far goalpost and in.

On what proved to be the game-winner, Trocheck was too late getting back. That allowed Siegenthaler to fire a good shot that beat Shesterkin far side. In these kinds of high impact games, it’s the details that matter.

Right after the Devils went back ahead, Shesterkin came up with two big saves. First, he denied a driving Hischier on a tip-in. It was a spectacular save. A falling Hischier collided with Shesterkin, leading to a stoppage. He apologized to him, even tapping Shesterkin.

It wasn’t a penalty. The ice was horrible. There were instances where players lost their edge. It happened a couple of different times to the Devils in one spot. The Garden is very busy with the Knicks playing. So, it wasn’t good.

Shesterkin would also stop a Haula backhand to keep it a one-goal game. He tried his best to move the puck up to help the offense. But they really struggled with the Devils defense.

As the clock went under 10 minutes, the Devils began to shrink the ice. They played a 1-2-2. It was like the Rangers’ players had never seen a neutral zone trap before. They refused to adjust. Instead of making short passes and dumping pucks in, they continued to force passes right into the middle of the ice. They were easily intercepted.

Those kinds of sloppy turnovers never help. The Devils’ 2-1 lead felt like it was 5-1. This wasn’t the Oilers or Leafs coming back to win in overtime. It was tight checking with little space.

The Rangers were so bad that the only shot in the last seven minutes was a weak Zibanejad attempt that Schmid easily gloved. That came with 4:35 left in regulation.

If not for a Palat misplay that resulted in an icing with exactly two minutes remaining, who knows when Gallant gets Shesterkin off the ice for an extra attacker. They were completely disorganized. Outplayed and out-hustled.

Following some more strong work defensively, Haula sent Bratt for a shot that missed wide. The rebound came off the back boards for a Palat empty netter that put the Rangers out of their misery.

When the buzzer sounded, there was a smattering of boos. It was mostly quiet with only the Devils and their contingent that made the Path train ride into Penn Station celebrating. They earned it.

For the Rangers, it’s back to the drawing board. They will get an extra day off before the pivotal Game Five this Thursday. Maybe they can look at the video and see what they did wrong.

Similar to the Devils, they’ll have to make necessary adjustments. Ruff was able to make key changes by bringing in Schmid and lineup moves that have solidified them.

Now, it’s Gallant who’s faced with a similar crisis. He identified what went wrong. Let’s see how his team responds. The pressure is on the Rangers. How quickly things change.

Posted in Battle Of Hudson, Column, Devils, NHL Playoffs, NYRangers | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Road sweet road as Devils tie the series with two straight tense wins at MSG

After Game 2, I was looking for some examples of teams who lost the first two home games as badly as the Devils did at the Rock last week who still came back to win the series. And while I didn’t really find that, maybe the point of this whole season is the Devils continually making the impossible possible. If they looked like they were a fluke who wasn’t ready for prime time after the first two games, they’ve certainly proven their road record wasn’t a fluke by walking into MSG and grinding out two straight nail-biters to even the series and restore ‘home-ice advantage’, for what that’s worth. At least it’ll be a home ice advantage in the stands again after I’ve been dreading the 3-1 scenario for days. A different kind of 0-2 start was alluded to in the wake of last Thursday’s defeat:

Not only have the Devils managed to flip the series back to even, but they’ve also flipped the script in terms of how they’re winning these games. Tight, defensive contests with great goaltending and special teams are how the Rangers are supposed to win games, right? Not the last three nights. How on this green earth has this turnaround happened? Like with almost anything, it’s never one silver bullet but you clearly have to start with the lineup changes before Game #3.

Whoever was ultimately responsible – since Lindy Ruff admitted he made all his changes after consulting with his goaltending coach Dave Rogalski, GM Tom Fitzgerald and in-house legend Martin Brodeur – they obviously hit the right note with pretty much all of their decisions, restoring Jonas Siegenthaler to the lineup over Brendan Smith after Lindy’s moment of madness switching them in Game 2, along with finally benching Miles Wood after one too many stupid offensive zone penalties.

Of course, the lineup change which had the most consequence was putting in rookie Akira Schmid for Vitek Vanecek in goal. As much as I had confidence Schmid could handle the moment, I wasn’t sure putting him in now with the way the team played in the first two games would really help matters. Early in Game #3 though, Ruff alluded to the fact that Schmid’s size and puckhandling were part of the reason why they made the switch, commenting on how the former could help with the fact that we have been giving up a lot of tip-in goals. It was at that point I thought, okay at least this decision had some form of logic to it rather than just playing the ‘make the goalie a scapegoat’ card.

Lindy himself admitted he didn’t really want to make the switch at first but came around on the idea. I’d probably say I would feel the same way. Of course it wouldn’t have mattered in the end if the Devils didn’t step up their play. It did seem as if the last two games (particularly Game 3), the Rangers were psyched out by Schmid’s size and tried to be too fine with their shooting. Even Artemi Panarin missed the net multiple times with grade-A chances on Saturday night.

Schmid playing well and the Devils finally clamping down on the Rangers’ power play gave them a chance but they still fell behind early, needing a Jack Hughes power play goal to tie Game 3 several minutes after Chris Kreider opened the scoring with his fifth goal of the series in the second period. Eventually it went into overtime, before a Jesper Bratt feed (his second assist of the night) led to Dougie Hamilton’s OT winner which kept the Devils within touching distance of evening the series. If you want a further recap, check out Derek’s blog post-Game 3. Just don’t listen to the ABC/ESPN broadcast if you want any kind of balanced coverage.

I don’t even feel like getting into that rant right now, except to say when you’re poking fun at the skate sharpener as a reason why the Devils are falling down on the ice as opposed to just admitting the ice is bad because there was an NBA playoff game the day before and it was a warm-ish weekend night, then you’re only looking to take shots. When you comment about how the Devils have had no shot attempts in four minutes when half that time the Devils were killing a penalty, I can’t take you seriously. Get your heads out of the computers with stat sheets and watch the game. Thank goodness after two games of being at the arena for losses and dealing with the national broadcast nonsense in Game #3, I finally got to watch the MSG Devils crew for Game #4.

Getting back to on-ice…Hughes waking up and finding some of his regular season form at the Garden has been a big reason for the turnaround. After two games of the Devils’ stars not playing anywhere near that level at home, Hughes at least is playing big-boy hockey. Not just with goals in two straight games (and three overall in the series), but also picking his spots to get physical. When your best player is throwing his body around, the rest of the team will get charged up by that. Of course, ultimately we pay him and play him top line minutes to score goals and put up points.

Unfortunately, I didn’t see this goal in real time or any of the first period tonight as I was playing one of my rec league games (sand volleyball in this case). I did get home in time for the second period and it was the same taut, tense affair that Game #3 was. Not a lot of chances either way. Even holding our slender 1-0 lead after two I wasn’t all that confident, since it seemed like it would be another game where the first to two won. Our odds of that got worse when the Rangers tied the game early in the third on a Vincent Trocheck goal, after sustaining pressure all through the first couple minutes of the third. Maybe sitting back in prevent to try to protect a 1-0 lead wasn’t the best way to come out.

Fortunately, there was still plenty of time in the third to reset, and then we caught a break that you typically need to win evenly matched games such as this. In this case, the break being an uncharacterisically bad goal allowed by Igor Shesterkin to Jonas Siegenthaler unscreened from a bad angle. Sometimes in the playoffs, guys find hot sticks out of nowhere. Siegs had four goals and twenty-one points in eighty games during the regular season and it bears repeating, was a healthy scratch four nights ago as the Devils suffered a second straight humiliation at the Rock. Oh how things can change…from scratch to Game 4 hero

I was tempted to post the movie clip which came to mind when seeing that goal go in off the normally solid Shesterkin…the scene from Rocky IV when the trainer Duke screamed at Rocky after he cut his opponent Drago in the second round, ‘You see, he’s not a machine! He’s a man!!!’. Of course, that goal would have meant little in the end if the Devils didn’t finish the deal and hang on. At least this time they didn’t try to play prevent defense, though they did manage to keep the Rangers’ high-danger chances to a minimum. Schmid from what I saw in the last two periods didn’t have nearly as much heavy lifting to do as he did at times in Game 3, but in the end, the 22-year old rookie did all you could ask of him yet again and then some.

All this after a stunning admission that he was nervous going into Game 3 no less…you wouldn’t have known it the way he played. I’m not sure it’s premature to say the Devils have found their starting goalie for the foreseeable future, and I still adore Vitek and respect what he did for us this year. As much as I normally hate the phrase ‘has a higher upside’, clearly that’s the case with Akira. He’s got the higher upside and right now is playing up to it on the biggest stage possible – in the most high-pressure environment imaginable – down two, after two straight home embarrassments and helping to steady the ship.

It might be too early to start comparing Schmid to Cam Ward circa 2006 but I’d be lying if I said that comparison didn’t flash in my mind, especially how he got his chance after Martin Gerber lost the first two games of the postseason at home to Montreal. Gerber basically had a career year in ’06 (posting 38 wins for the top-seed in the East), much like Vitek did this year. In that playoff, it was the young rookie Ward who came in and led the Hurricanes through the postseason to an unlikely Stanley Cup. Ironically the one part of the comparison that doesn’t fit – aside from being absurdly early in the playoffs to think of a Cup – is that Ward was terrible that regular season, while Schmid had already shown signs of this kind of play during his fourteen starts and four relief appearances with a 2.13 GAA and .922 save percentage.

I shudder to think what the results would have been if Mackenzie Blackwood didn’t get lit up in Game #82 of the regular season with Schmid coming in to save the day and guide the Devils to their franchise record 52nd win. Seemingly that finally forced the issue towards making Schmid the #2, and in short order he’s become the #1. You also have to give the Devils’ defense credit for playing better in these two games though, particularly tonight. They’ve stopped the Rangers’ power play from running riot and kept their skill players at bay the way they did to us in the first two games.

I wouldn’t go as far as some people would in considering our third period a master class a la the late ’90’s Devils, but certainly in the last several minutes at least they played about as well as you could have given the circumstance. In the third period, I alternated between confidence given how they’ve come back in the series and nervousness over what if they actually lost this lead after getting that kind of a goal, which should have turned the tide enough to get over the line. Finally though, the Devils sealed it with an empty-netter from Ondrej Palat, who’s otherwise had a disappointing playoff. Hopefully that gets him started.

After it looked like a disappointing series was going to result from one of the two or three most hyped matchups in the first round (the Devils were the last team in the first round of the postseason to assure there wouldn’t be a sweep), now it’s on like Donkey Kong as the kids say. They’ve clearly passed the resiliency test as well as beginning to learn how to win in the playoffs. Now comes the next challenge…channeling their re-won confidence and energy into giving the same type of performance – if not better – at home and finally giving someone’s home fans a reason to cheer at the end of the game in this series.

Posted in Devils, NHL Playoffs, NY Rangers | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Controversial decision that gave Kings overtime win over Oilers part of a league problem

Late Friday night in Los Angeles, the Kings and Oilers battled into overtime of a very competitive Game Three. There were plenty of physical battles between two Western rivals that don’t like each other.

The intriguing first round series is a rematch of a year ago. That one went seven. Eventually, Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl were too much for the defensive minded Kings. They overcame the diligent checking of Phillip Danault and Anze Kopitar to prevail. Edmonton went all the way to the Western Conference Final before getting swept by eventual champion Colorado.

If you like contrasting styles, then this is your kind of series. The high-flying Oilers love to get out in transition due to the ridiculous speed and skill of McDavid. He and Draisaitl can turn on a dime, making the game look easy. At times, McDavid is in video game cheat mode. His pair of power play goals from the same spot that beat Joonas Korpisalo were a perfect example. High glove and high blocker.

Draisaitl always steps it up in the postseason. It’s the 27-year old German superstar who has the better postseason numbers than his more famous Canadian teammate. That hasn’t changed. While McDavid (2-1-3) has been held without an even strength point in three games, Draisaitl has six points (3-3-6), including half at even strength. In 40 career playoff games, Draisaitl has 65 points (21-44-65). McDavid is 23-35-58 in the identical amount.

Obviously, Edmonton will need more from McDavid at five-on-five to win the series. He’s being shadowed by the gritty Danault. A good two-way center who can make life difficult. At one point in overtime, the other night, he checked McDavid along the wall and kept him there. Oilers fans didn’t like it, but it was clean due to the puck being there.

Moments later, the Kings would get the winner when Gabe Vilardi set up Trevor Moore for the winner at 3:24 in overtime. They won it due to an undisciplined penalty from Ryan Nugent-Hopkins for a slash on Alex Iafallo. It wasn’t much. But if you break the stick, it’s automatic.

What isn’t is the mystifying way the officials determine controversial calls like the one that led to the Moore power play goal that gave the Kings a two games to one lead on the exasperated Oilers.

Prior to the goal, there was a play where it sure looked like Vilardi knocked down the puck with a high stick. It happened close to the Edmonton net. When the puck bounced off Mattias Ekholm, Vilardi retrieved the puck and made a perfect feed in front for a Moore finish that ended matters.

However, the Oilers never left the bench. Immediately, McDavid went to the refs signaling for a high stick. That would’ve wiped out Moore’s goal. He was on the ice for the play. The officials then went to a lengthy video review to determine if Vilardi illegally touched the puck.

Given the amount of time it took, many observers felt it was conclusive. It sure looked like Vilardi’s high stick made contact with the puck in mid-air. Even though the puck went off Ekholm’s back, that’s not considered possession. So, the play probably should’ve been blown dead.

Instead, the missed stoppage allowed Vilardi to make a good play from behind the net. His pass for Moore allowed him to beat Stuart Skinner far side from too easy a position. Nobody took him. Controversy or not, that can’t happen. Neither should the Oilers be taking undisciplined penalties that have cost them in Games One and Three.

The issue is why even have video review if they can’t get it right. Even if you have the opinion that you can’t tell whether the puck changed rotation, even more replays from different angles seemed to indicate that it went off Vilardi’s stick and then straight down. As usual, they ruled that it it was a good goal with the usual, “The call on the ice stands.”

Great explanation. Of course, we know that if they don’t feel there’s conclusive evidence, they can’t overturn a call. It just felt like Edmonton got robbed. When most hockey analysts disagree with the decision, that isn’t reassuring. You better believe all eyes will be on Game Four later tonight.

That is far from the only controversial call. We’ve seen refs miss blatant stick fouls during games. The Islanders were irate at no call in overtime of Game Two when Scott Mayfield took one up high. The Canes won the game moments later when Jesper Fast scored the winner.

Of course, it depends on your perspective. Former player Mike Rupp believes that the linesman didn’t make the call because Mayfield’s stick tapped Jordan Martinook’s stick to create the contact. It’s a pretty interesting explanation.

Whatever side you’re on, the Hurricanes won the game to take a 2-0 series lead. The Islanders never recovered in time to stop Jordan Staal from setting up Fast for the overtime winner that beat Ilya Sorokin short side. They lost 4-3.

At least they responded the other night with a 5-1 home win at UBS Arena. They even set an NHL record for the most goals in the shortest span. Following Kyle Palmieri’s power play redirection that made it 2-1, Matt Martin scored 44 seconds later. That was followed by Mayfield scoring from 180 feet away. Anders Lee then tipped in a Casey Cizikas shot to make it four straight goals over a playoff record 2:18 span.

Game Four is currently taking place now. The Islanders will need to rally to even the series. They trail 2-0.

You had a crazy game between the Maple Leafs and Lightning last night. Somehow, the Leafs rallied to win Game Three in Tampa 4-3 in overtime. Despite being dominated for large stretches by the Bolts, Toronto got a clutch game-tying goal from rental Ryan O’Reilly with a minute left. He was able to put in a rebound past Andrei Vasilevskiy, who gave up a bad goal when it looked like his team would win the big game.

Instead, it was Ilya Samsonov who stood on his head in overtime. He made a few huge saves when the Lightning were all over the Leafs’ net. That allowed O’Reilly to win an offensive draw back for Morgan Rielly, whose point shot beat Vasilevskiy for the shocking OT winner with 45 seconds left. Samsonov made 36 saves to steal the game. The Leafs lead the series two games to one.

The biggest highlight came when Rielly was involved in an unfortunate hit that sent Brayden Point flying into the corner boards. The Bolts’ Cup hero stayed down for a while in obvious pain. Nikita Kucherov immediately responded by going after Rielly. He gave him a headlock. This led to chaos.

Kucherov and O’Reilly fought. So, too did Steven Stamkos and Auston Matthews. It was an easy win for Stamkos. Matthews had never had a fight in the NHL. It showed.

Originally, they made a boarding major call on Rielly. But after going to video review, they determined that his hit on Point was clean. There was no malicious intent. Point’s momentum carried him into the boards due to the speed. It was unfortunate. It really looked like another major injury for Point. Astonishingly, he came back and didn’t miss a shift. A big break for the Lightning even though they blew Game Three.

In fact, the Leafs wound up with a power play due to Lightning goalscorer Darren Raddysh taking a roughing minor on Mitch Marner. However, they were completely shut down by the Lightning.

It really felt over after a terrific forechecking shift from Anthony Cirelli, Tanner Jeannot, and Stamkos with 90 seconds left. But the Leafs never panicked. Two icings doomed the Bolts. That allowed O’Reilly to get the equalizer. He also would win the crucial draw back to Rielly for his winner. That’s what they got him for. These exact moments.

If you’re the Lightning, there’s no reason to panic. They played a good game, which coach Jon Cooper pointed out. But they must get Game Four at home. I think most want to see a 2-2 series going back to Toronto. Then, it would be the best of three. Unless you’re a Leafs fan.

The misses in last night’s game between the Rangers and Devils were just as bad. Barclay Goodrow elbowed Timo Meier. Mika Zibanejad got away with a slash prior to Chris Kreider’s goal. The worst miss was Meier throwing himself on Igor Shesterkin, who got the extra for roughing. The Devils scored on the power play when Jack Hughes beat Shesterkin.

Essentially, both teams benefitted from calls that led to their first goals in regulation. The officiating continues to be bad. Whether it’s the speed of the game or the way they call it, it isn’t good. At times, the Stanley Cup Playoffs are hard to watch. The league needs to make changes, so there are fewer controversies during these games.

The Bruins proved why they’re going to be tough to beat. Winning without both Patrice Bergeron and David Krejci in Game Three. That showed off their depth. Along with the team structure, they took apart the Panthers 4-2 to take home ice back. Best wishes go out to Bergeron’s Dad, who’s fighting cancer.

When Alex Lyon was replaced the other night by Sergei Bobrovsky, the now backup goalie should get Game Four. Imagine paying $10 million for a backup.

Posted in Column | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Hamilton’s overtime winner gives Devils life with a 2-1 road victory over Rangers to take Game Three, Schmid earns first win in postseason debut, NYR lead series 2-1

It’s now a series. Dougie Hamilton’s goal at 11:36 in overtime gave the Devils a badly needed 2-1 win over the Rangers in Game Three before a sellout crowd of 18,006 at Madison Square Garden.

On a great play by a rushing Jesper Bratt, he drew two Rangers to get the puck over for a wide open Hamilton, who fired home the overtime winner past Igor Shesterkin to silence the home fans. Bratt was a factor picking up two assists for his first two points of the first round series.

So was Hamilton. Shutdown in the first two games, the Devils’ most dangerous weapon from the blue line set up a tying Jack Hughes power play goal and got his first of the series with 8:24 remaining in the first overtime.

While he earned the game’s first star, the real heroics were provided by Game Three starter Akira Schmid. Making his postseason debut, the 22-year old rookie netminder was superb in making 35 saves on 36 shots to post his first win of the playoffs.

Following the morning skate where he was the first goalie off, the anticipation was that coach Lindy Ruff would go to Schmid. Of course, he kept things quiet to keep the press guessing. However, it was obvious that after the Rangers’ second straight 5-1 win, there would be a change in the net.

Prior to the game, it was revealed that Schmid would get the nod. A former fifth round pick in 2018, the Swiss goalie had a good rookie year. In 18 appearances, he went 9-5-2 with a 2.13 GAA, .922 save percentage and one shutout. He only had 24 games (18 starts) of NHL experience. However, the poise that he plays with always made him an option.

The game started ominously for the Rangers. On an early chance from Bratt after he got behind K’Andre Miller, Igor Shesterkin stopped him 22 seconds in. But Patrick Kane hooked Bratt to hand the Devils an early power play.

They continued to struggle on the five-on-four. Hughes got the only shot on Shesterkin, who made the save. On a successful penalty kill, the Blueshirts remained aggressive by taking the body on Hughes. That kept the Devils off the scoreboard.

After the power play expired, Shesterkin made a stop on Tomas Tatar to get a whistle. In the biggest game of their season, Ruff adjusted his lineup. Miles Wood was replaced by Curtis Lazar on the fourth line. Jonas Siegenthaler was back in on the first pair with Brendan Smith out.

There were also changes to the lines, including Ondrej Palat with Hughes and Haula on the second line. Timo Meier moved up to the top line alongside Hischier and Bratt.

Rangers coach Gerard Gallant made no changes. He didn’t have to. The lines remained intact with the D pairs.

If there was a noticeable difference in the first period, it was the Devils’ ability to get in transition. They found more time and space to play their speed game. They also defended the net much better than the first two games. That made for a closely fought opening period. One the Devils led in shots 12-11.

Following two saves from Shesterkin on Bratt and Hischier, Mike McLeod took a bad offensive zone penalty when he boarded Ryan Lindgren from behind. That sent the Rangers to their first power play.

On it, Mika Zibanejad got the best two scoring chances. Twice, he was set up in the slot for one-timers. Both were denied by a sharp Schmid. Those saves along with one on a long Alexis Lafreniere shot got him into the game.

With the action more fast-paced, each team traded chances. On one side, Patrick Kane tested Schmid, who was up to the challenge. On the opposite end, Shesterkin stopped Damon Severson.

There was more hitting as well from the red and black. The Devils finished with 31 hits, including a team high six from Siegenthaler. The Rangers were credited with 23. Jacob Trouba paced them with seven. He was again a tower of strength on defense.

Another difference was the Devils’ willingness to sacrifice their bodies. They blocked 17 shots. No player had more than two. But it was a team effort. The Rangers had 19 blocks. Game Three was more evenly fought.

The best opportunity went to the Rangers. A lead pass for Artemi Panarin sent him in on a mini-break. One on one with Schmid, he sent his high shot wide. He felt some back pressure, which might’ve caused him to fire quicker. That was enough to keep it scoreless.

After a tough save by Shesterkin on a Meier backhand, Adam Fox blocked a Ryan Graves attempt. With under five minutes left, a Siegenthaler turnover allowed the Rangers’ checking line to get two shots. Schmid denied both Tyler Motte and Jimmy Vesey. He also made a long stop on Fox.

Schmid would make stops on Fox and Kane late in the period. Shesterkin’s best save was off a Meier rebound when he turned away Hischier on a tough angle. He simply closed everything up.

For the first time in the series, there was no scoring in a period. A welcome change for the Devils. They played a good road period. By being more aggressive, they looked like a team that had a great season. That was an indication that the game would be tougher to get.

Things picked up in the second period. After the refs missed a Barclay Goodrow elbow to Meier, who stayed down for a couple of minutes, Palat forced a back pass that went right to Kane. The turnover allowed Kane to move the puck for Zibanejad. He got it up for Kreider, who beat Schmid high short side for the game’s first goal at 3:39.

The goal put Kreider in the record books. By scoring his fifth goal in the first three games, he became the first Ranger to ever do that to start a postseason. Everything he does is no longer a surprise. He’s been their best forward. One day, we might see number 20 hang from the Garden rafters.

With a secondary assist, that gave Kane five points. He’s certainly raised his level. He was again good for the second consecutive game.

Before the goal, the Devils bench was unhappy. That was due to Zibanejad getting away with a slash that helped lead to the ice breaker. The officiating was bad. They had a few misses that went against both sides. Considering what took place in Los Angeles on early Saturday, there’s a lot to be said about the refs and linesmen.

Up one, the Blueshirts got a second straight power play when Ryan Graves took down Vincent Trocheck for interference. However, the top unit fired blanks. Zibanejad missed twice, and so did Panarin. The Devils were more aggressive up top, taking away Fox. He wasn’t allowed to get to the middle. That adjustment allowed them to kill all five Rangers power plays.

As the second moved on, Trouba found himself open for a shot that he sent wide. That was an issue for our shooters. There were opportunities to get the second goal on Schmid. But many shots never reached the target.

Following a Meier hit, Goodrow took down Meier and tackled him. Outside of a Hamilton missile that hit the crossbar, the Devils didn’t do enough with their second man-advantage.

Shesterkin wasn’t that busy in the period. However, he did make saves on both Hamilton and Meier, who both were much more visible. The latter was a nuisance.

During a scrum, Braden Schneider gave him a shot. But as he was going down, Meier intentionally threw himself on top of Shesterkin. He reacted by giving Meier a shot. With things escalating, Panarin went after the much bigger Kevin Bahl. It was shocking. Somehow, Meier avoided a goalie interference penalty. Instead, the Devils somehow got a power play out of that fracas.

The miss on Meier proved costly. With Bratt and Hamilton able to find an open Hughes in the left circle, he beat Shesterkin with a perfect shot short side to tie the score at 10:37 on the five-on-four. It was his second of the playoffs.

After a Shesterkin save on a Hischier deflection, the Devils didn’t do much offensively. Instead, they took undisciplined penalties. Bratt took down Alexis Lafreniere in the offensive zone to put the Rangers back on the power play.

Following a Kreider turnover that allowed the Devils to clear down, the number one unit got three shots. However, Schmid remained calm by stopping Panarin and then Zibanejad twice. Those timely saves made a difference.

Meier took an interference minor when he knocked down Trouba in the offensive zone. After nothing from the top unit, out came the second unit. They came very close to grabbing back the lead.

Trouba sent a shot wide. Lafreniere just missed with a hard slap shot as the power play expired. Schmid was down. If that hits the net, the Rangers go ahead with under a minute left in the period.

Instead, the game remained tied at one headed to the locker room. The Rangers held an 11-6 edge in shots yet couldn’t come out with a lead. It felt like a missed opportunity.

The third period was more conservatively played. Neither team got much going. There was more tight checking. That led to not as much room to create. There were hitting and blocked shots.

Schmid made early stops on Filip Chytil and Niko Mikkola. Both sides finished checks. Following a Schmid save on Fox from distance, Graves had a big block on Zibanejad. It was his defense that helped the Devils out. He’d later make a game saver in sudden death.

One of the best chances came when Tarasenko was wide open. But his shot from the left circle went high and wide. That basically summed up the game for the Rangers. They didn’t bury their chances.

On a good forecheck from Lafreniere, Chytil, and Kakko, Trouba had a great look. However, he once again fired wide. That line was effective at five-on-five. They cycled the puck well to create opportunities. It feels like they’re getting close to breaking out.

Bratt would get a good chance from point blank range. Playing his best game of the series, he tested Shesterkin in tight but was denied.

Almost all the Rangers’ six shots came during the first half. That included a Motte bid that Schmid stood firm on.

The Devils were able to use their speed to get opportunities. After Lafreniere missed on a backhand attempt, Hischier won an offensive draw for a point shot that Bratt deflected wide. Shesterkin then shut down Meier. He’d also deny Hughes on the following shift.

With exactly six minutes left in regulation, Graves got his stick up on Kane to put the Rangers on their fifth power play. Surely, they’d make the Devils pay.

Remarkably, Panarin had two unbelievable scoring chances from primary areas to give the Rangers the lead. On the first one, he was wide open in the middle but fired wide. Then, Panarin was set up in the left circle for another rocket. But his one-timer missed high and wide, leaving him shaking his head in disbelief.

Chytil had a chance on the latter part. But his tip-in went over the net. Rinse. Repeat. The Rangers were the gang that couldn’t shoot straight. Had they converted on one of these chances, we could be talking about a potential sweep.

The final four minutes were played so cautiously that neither team got a shot. Nobody wanted to make a mistake. That was clearly obvious on the Devils’ side. They really played it safe and took their chances in overtime.

In sudden death, the tempo was faster. Both teams went for it. The Blueshirts got the first three shots of overtime. Once again, Schmid didn’t seem rattled. He stopped Trocheck, Tarasenko, and Schneider, who showed off his strong skating.

Schmid would also deny Kane during an early shift. Kane always turns it up in OT. He’s been a Stanley Cup hero and ended three series, including the Blackhawks’ first of three Cups.

As it went on, the Devils began to find their legs. They used their strong transition to generate opportunities. Shesterkin denied both Meier and then Bratt. Bratt would make another bid, but be denied.

On what was a close call, a long shot came towards Kakko for a tricky rebound. But his backhand was stopped by Schmid. He’d later deny Tarasenko. Although he didn’t score like the first two games, he was quite good.

Zibanejad had Kreider for the possible winner on a two-on-one. But at the very last moment, a diving Graves got his stick on the puck to break it up. If he doesn’t make that defensive play, it’s likely Kreider’s sixth in three games. Instead, he made a game saving play that also saved the Devils season.

The Rangers had another great chance to win it due to Lafreniere. On a very active shift, he tested Schmid twice with dangerous shots. It looked like he had jump throughout. He again was noticeable by finishing checks and defending hard. He stopped Hughes once. It feels like Lafreniere could be on the verge of something big. We’ll see what happens on Monday in the all important Game Four.

After he took Motte off the puck, here came Bratt skating freely into the Rangers zone. He made a very patient play by faking out the defense. Once he drew them out of position, he found a cutting Hamilton for the winner with 8:24 left in overtime. He had too much time, beating Shesterkin high glove to get the Devils back in the series.

It’s ironic that the road team has won all three games. Both the Rangers and Devils had better records away from home. I felt home ice wouldn’t matter in this series. So far, it hasn’t. The Rangers need to flip the script tomorrow night. They don’t want to go back to The Rock tied at 2-2.

Interestingly, this reminds me of the first round meeting in 2008. The Rangers took the first two in Newark before losing in overtime for Game Three. That game is best known for Sean Avery waving his stick at Martin Brodeur. The Avery Rule. What a joke that was. I’ll refrain from any further commentary on Avery.

Fortunately, a late Marc Staal goal won Game Four. Another game we were at. The Rangers then wrapped up the much closer fought series in five. It was really about Henrik Lundqvist. Maybe Shesterkin can repeat that. He’s only been beaten four times. Once at even strength on the Hamilton OT winner.

For my three stars, I went with one Ranger and two Devils. I selected Kreider third for his fifth goal. He has been dangerous. I went with Bratt over Hamilton for number two. I thought he was the best Devils skater. Number one went to Schmid.

https://twitter.com/BattleOfHudson/status/1649979093176254466?t=aISfxmG39ddPHabLnVyI6w&s=19

Postgame Notes: Rangers out-shot the Devils 36-28, including 8-5 in overtime…In a hard luck loss, Shesterkin made 26 saves on 28 shots. For the series, he’s allowed four goals on 80 shots for a 1.26 GAA and .950 save percentage… John Marino led all skaters in ice time with 28:41. Adam Fox had 28:03 for the Rangers.

Key Statistics

SOG: NJD 28 (Bratt/Hughes/Meier 5 each) NYR 36 (Kane/Zibanejad 4 each)

Total Attempts: NJD 61 (Meier 10) NYR 69 (Panarin 9)

Missed Shots: NJD 14 (Hamilton 5) NYR 16 (Panarin 4)

Giveaways: NJD 15 (Palat 3) NYR 19 (Kreider/Trocheck 3 each)

Takeaways: NJD 10 (Graves/Hughes 2 each) NYR 15 (Trocheck 4)

Face-offs: NJD 25 (McLeod 11-5) NYR 37 (Zibanejad 18-10), Chytil 10-3)

Posted in Battle Of Hudson, Devils, NHL Playoffs, NYRangers | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

A day of reckoning in Newark as Devils come off second straight home embarrassment

Amazing how a couple of games can change your perspective on things…to think, I felt before the series that the nightmare scenario would be losing in 6 or 7 games. Against the Rangers, any loss would feel catastrophic but after the first two games of this series, we’d be doing well just to get it back to the Garden for a Game 6 at this point. The more things change, the more they stay the same…indeed. More hideous special teams, more bad coaching decisions, more dumb penalties and the same lack of adjustments to the Ranger gameplan led to the exact same result in Game 2 – another 5-1 loss at the Rock.

Granted, some things were different. For one, the Devils actually scored first – and with skaters on the ice! – when Erik Haula’s power play goal in the first period jolted the building back to life, and seemingly the team as well. At least for the rest of the first period, we finally saw glimpses of the ‘winningest Devils team of all time’. Even with that, we were fortunate to have a 1-0 lead after the first given all the good saves Vitek Vanecek had to make when the Devils (yet again) came out flat-footed in the first ten minutes of the game. Still, given we had the lead and the crowd back buzzing, I was at least somewhat hopeful we’d find our footing and have a good game on our hands.

But NOOOOO…the Devils once again came out flat in a period, again and again having to make Vitek save their collective bacon until Vladimir Tarasenko gave the Rangers their deserved breakthrough at 5:57 of the second period after a typically awful Brendan Smith shift helped the Rangers keep the zone for what seemed to be minutes before Tarasenko scored through traffic. From there, the rest of the game was like the air coming out of the collective balloon in the arena, both for the fans and the team itself. As if the Rangers needed any help last night, the Devils gladly provided it with stupid penalty after stupid penalty, two of them resulting in goals in the second period when our so-called penalty kill proved the axiom ‘those who don’t learn the past are doomed to repeat it’.

You would think after allowing two tip-in goals to Chris Kreider on the penalty kill in Game 1 that there would be some attempted adjustment, but nope – not our brilliant staff! Incredibly, Kreider repeated his Game 1 performance with another two tip-in goals on the power play as we played the exact same passive box and let them do what they wanted with the puck. Which equals four power play goals in two games if you lost count, and I’m close to losing count myself. Sam Rosen might be close to losing his voice with all the ‘IT’S A POWER PLAY GOAL!’ calls he’s making.

Kreider’s two second period goals basically ended the game as a contest given the lack of scoring opportunities the Devils have created in the series. Still, the Devils have zero five-on-five goals with their only two scores coming on a meaningless penalty shot in Game 1, and a power play in Game 2. Who knew that Igor Shesterkin wouldn’t even matter in the series since they can’t get shots to him in the first place?!

After everyone’s kvetching (including mine) about goaltending following Game 1, the Devils actually got better goaltending from Vitek in Game 2 but you wouldn’t know it from the statline. Sadly, Vitek managed to allow even more goals playing better – the fifth goal in Game 1 was an empty-netter – because the team was just that bad. Would I go with Akira Schmid in Game 3…my short answer is who cares? I have less of an appetite for this as I did before Game 2, after all what goalie was really making a difference last night? Even in Game 1, if you got above-average goaltending you’d still have lost 3-1 anyway, or 4-1 with another empty-netter. If anything, I’d rather not ruin Schmid’s confidence by putting him in when the team is a total tire fire.

As much as I want to start with the low-hanging fruit that is coaching idiocy along with dumb players like Smith and Miles Wood, I’ll start with where we should start with the eviscerations – our ‘star players’ have to be better, plain and simple. Whether it’s Timo Meier committing one of the said stupid penalties leading to the Rangers’ third goal, or Jesper Bratt clowning himself allowing a Patrick Kane breakaway special on goal #4 last night, it’s been a disappointing series for our big names. Including Dougie Hamilton, Jack Hughes and Nico Hischier. When other skaters are on the ice, I have the same amount of points as those five do combined. While Kreider is scoring goals by the handful, Shesterkin hasn’t allowed a 5-on-5 goal yet and Adam Fox had two assists in 21:35 of icetime last night. Simply put, their stars are playing like stars…ours have left a lot to be desired and that’s the biggest reason why instead of the competitive series most of us expected, we have the second coming of Rangers-Islanders circa 1994.

All that said, it would be nice for a veteran coach like Lindy Ruff to not actively handicap the skaters on the ice. You would expect no panic from a coach who has seen the rodeo before, but you would have been wrong in this case. Lindy’s lineup in Game 2 screamed panic mode, specifically promoting Wood to the third line after a critical mindless penalty in Game 1, and scratching Jonas Siegenthaler for Smith, who’d been relegated to a bench role down the stretch as the team was gearing up for the playoffs. When I saw the Siegs-Smith lineup change on Twitter and told my friend in 104, he seriously thought it was injury-related.

They weren’t the only ones. And that decision wasn’t made any more logical by Smith’s typically dumb neanderthal penalty in the first period, even if the Devils did manage to kill that one off. Ostensibly, he was brought in to help the PK…well mission not accomplished with two more power play goals allowed, all by the same player doing the same thing.

Just like a typical hockey dinosaur, Lindy also was keyed up on getting more physicality in the lineup (even mentioning the fact Smith was an ‘ex-Ranger’ as part of his decision was also mind-boggling). His response to the team being jumpy in Game 1 was to try to hit our way out of it in Game 2. I realize the playoffs are different from the regular season and you have to play with a more physical edge but by the same token, you can’t completely abandon what got you there. To a certain level you have to play to your strengths and make the other team stop you.

In many ways, the fact Hughes had arguably the two biggest bodychecks of his career in the first two games is both good and yet indicative of a larger problem, the fact our old-school coach wants to be more physical – and seriously thinks THAT was the problem with Game 1 rather than just nervousness and perhaps leaning too much into the skill aspect. So instead of correcting toward the middle, we overcorrected and got too stupidly physical in Game 2. Wood getting a promotion instead of a demotion is yet another example of this. And in the category of stupid players will do stupid things, he followed up a stupid penalty in Game 1 with another in Game 2.

Not that Lindy’s neanderthals were alone in stupidity, just the most obvious examples of our own self-inflicted mistakes. Nor does it look like we’re actually learning from those mistakes either, judging by the posted Game 3 practice lines:

Scratching Kevin Bahl (who’s been one of the steadiest defensemen the last few weeks) for Smith might actually be dumber than scratching Siegs given his struggles at times this season, though he laughably went from healthy scratch right back to first pairing. Keeping Meier on the third line when your ‘top’ lines aren’t scoring is part of a silly, misguided belief that you’re spreading out the scoring. There’s no such thing as spreading out the scoring when you have two goals in two games. Having Michael McLeod be his center is also laughable, while Ondrej Palat and his zero goals and five points in twenty games gets a promotion to the Hischier line. Yeah, we know he’s a ‘playoff performer’…he hasn’t exactly done it for us and there are whispers he’s not going to be the same until next year because of his groin surgery early this season. If we’re already worried about wear and tear on Palat in year one of a five-year deal, it’s gonna be fun when we get to years 3 and 4.

Anyone – Devils fan or not – might think while reading this that I and other fans should have no right to be angry with this team, after all they’ve become relevant this year again and then some. There was certainly plenty of anger after the second period yesterday, when boos rained from the sky from everyone including me. When you consider the fact this team got 112 points and set all sorts of records, to me that only upped the expectations and inflated our belief in this team. The excuse of not having experience is a cop-out (look at Seattle beating Colorado on the road in Game 1 of their series, for example), what’s the excuse for a veteran coach panicking or our supposed top D going MIA in the first two games? I certainly wasn’t asking for Cup or bust, but when you follow up a 100+ point season with a quickie exit in the first round, it feels like the regular season was a gigantic waste of time and I said the same thing in 1998 and 1999 when they had back-to-back first-round exits off of division title seasons and even those weren’t as quick as this one is shaping up to be.

Might as well have had the Buffalo season and come up heroically one point short of the playoffs if this is the best you can do now. At least we’d all have ended the season with a good feeling, and not the feeling that we were somehow conned and duped by what now looks to be a fraudulent team who didn’t belong with the big boys after all. Assuming this season ends in the next few days, it’s going to be impossible to judge how we should feel about this season. A dramatic overachieve in the regular season followed by a dramatic underachieve in the playoffs. I get small sample size, Tampa was swept by Columbus a few years ago yadda yadda yadda, spare me. A lot of their players had deep playoff runs before then, we’re still waiting for one with this group.

Not to mention there’s a difference between losing and being embarrassed. This series has been an unmitigated embarrassment so far. Yes, there are examples of teams who’ve lost the first two games of a series and come back to win. There are even examples of teams who’ve lost the first two at home winning a series. Now go and find me an example of a team who lost this badly in the first two games of a series at home that came back to win? To wit, here are the four hockey examples I’ve come up with where teams lost the first two at home and won a series:

2018 – Capitals lose the first two at home to the Blue Jackets…both games were OT losses though, certainly not embarassments

2011 – Montreal beat Boston two in a row in Boston…the combined score of both those games (2-0 and 3-1) were the score of each of our games with the Rangers.

2003 – Washington beat Tampa two in a row in Tampa 3-0 and 6-3 after a late empty-netter…close but not quite the level of our twin 5-1 defeats

2000 – Penguins beat the Flyers at Philly 2-0 and 4-1 in the first two games, again not nearly the level of emasculation twin 5-1 walkovers are.

Sadly the best example I can come up with where a team has been emasculated to this degree and won a series is the 1996 World Series, more than two decades ago in another sport. And that Yankee team had won two playoff rounds and was on its way to four titles in five years. Anyone who thinks this Devils team is going to be on that level in the near future is out of their minds.

And another thing…this team not only urinated on itself in the first two games but they did it in front of a crowd waiting for a reason to cheer, that hasn’t had much of a reason to do so in big playoff games. In spite of the Devils’ best efforts to maximize profit over getting their own fans in the building, Devil fans still outnumbered Ranger fans by a surprisingly comfortable margin in the first two games of the series. In Game 1, the Rangers (with an assist from Vitek) quickly took the crowd out of it while in Game 2, the Devils themselves gradually took the air of the building with their incompetence and stupidity. It won’t take as much effort to turn the crowd blue in Game 5 assuming a miracle doesn’t happen with the Devils actually winning both in MSG.

Not to mention the fact this team historically has been pitiful at home in the postseason since moving to Newark. Other than 2012 (where they went 7-4), they’ve had a lovely home record of 4-10 in the postseason, including 0-5 against the Rangers in 2008 and this year. In our fifteen years of Newark, we’ve won playoff series in exactly one of them – 2012. Every other year has either been an unmitigated disaster or another playoff disappointment, with the possible exception of 2018 where realistically you knew they weren’t going to be on the same level as Tampa, even if they hadn’t quite gotten into their Cup-winning stride yet.

As good as this Ranger team is, this should not be a 2018-style mismatch. Even in that series the Devils looked more competent than they have in the first two games of this series, where they pretty much gave a playoff effort for about 10 of the 120 minutes so far. Derek might point out that in the 2006 series, the Rangers themselves had an unexpectedly good season torpedoed by the Devils in four straight, so on a certain level they could gain payback here (though they clearly got payback two years later as it was). At least in that series the Rangers were down 2-0 before they hit home ice though, then lost franchise stalwart Jaromir Jagr due to injury early in Game 3. Plus we were just white-hot going into that postseason. There was no indication of any kind of mismatch this year.

So yes, I’m angry. The fact I left ‘both’ games early (partly due to train considerations, but also I just knew they weren’t coming back either time given the way they were playing) and am even considering not going to Game 5 should we be in the situation where it could be another home elimination is mind-boggling. I’ve been to every playoff game since the Rock opened, but with the way this series has gone so far and this team’s lack of…consistency at the Rock in general, I’m having trouble justifying a reason to go to Game 5 and experience MSG 2.0 yet again.

I shouldn’t have to qualify my anger by saying I’m not trying to take away one iota of credit from the Rangers, they’ve obviously executed their gameplan flawlessly and their stars have played like stars should in the postseason. God knows they’ll get plenty of credit from the national media who can’t wait to pump their tires anyway. It’s eminently possible we wouldn’t win the series even while playing well, there’s a reason both of us picked a seven-game series after all. I’m not angry we’re losing, I’m angry we’re not even giving ourselves a chance to win, or physically competing at a playoff-ready level and this was supposed to be an even matchup given where both teams finished in the regular season.

This organization has another two more games here to right the ship and at least get back the good feeling we had about this season. Otherwise we’re going to have to deal with a very sour ending to what had been a sweet return to relevance.

Posted in Battle Of Hudson, Devils, NY Rangers | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

First Round: Showtime as Kane, Kreider lead Rangers to 5-1 win to take Game Two over frustrated Devils, lead series 2-0

It was Showtime at The Prudential Center in Newark. On Thursday night, Patrick Kane reminded people why he was acquired. The 34-year old American star had an impact in the Rangers’ 5-1 win over the Devils to take Game Two before a sold-out crowd.

Feeling he had more to give between days off, the former Blackhawks three-time Stanley Cup winner delivered to help put the Rangers up two games to none on a visibly frustrated Devils. Kane assisted on two more Chris Kreider power play goals and then scored a beauty in the third period to put the game away.

After falling behind on an Erik Haula power play goal during a well played first period, the Rangers responded with a dominant second period. They would go on to outscore their close Hudson rival three-zip in what proved to be a pivotal middle stanza.

The Devils did some good things in the game’s first 20 minutes. They were more desperate. With coach Lindy Ruff inserting both Yegor Sharangovich and Brendan Smith into the lineup that saw adjustments to all four of their lines and two defensive pairs, they came out with more aggression.

They finished checks. It was predictably more physical. Exactly what you’d expect for a second game. But despite bringing more to the table, they could only get one past Igor Shesterkin. That came when, during a power play with Niko Mikkola off for cross-checking Nathan Bastian, Ruff decided to have Mike McLeod play on the power play with 20 seconds left in the five-on-four.

He then drove to the net where he got a piece of an Ondrej Palat shot to create a rebound. That allowed Haula to score his first of the series from directly in front with Adam Fox outnumbered.

Prior to that goal from the gritty Haula, who was one of the best players for the red and black, Jacob Trouba delivered an early hit on Devils captain Nico Hischier during the game’s first shift. On a play behind the net, it was the Rangers captain who gave Hischier a clean shoulder check. Hischier got back up and kept playing.

Trouba had an impact finishing with a game high eight hits. Three came in the first. He and partner K’Andre Miller have played well thus far. It’s Trouba, who’s the more steadier player. He handles the gritty stuff while Miller uses his skating and long reach.

When they attacked the Rangers net, the Devils had some shots on Shesterkin, who again looked locked in. But they didn’t find many rebounds. They also missed the net a lot. Both teams actually each had 20 shots that missed completely. The problem for the Devils is that they didn’t score at five-on-five. Unlike Game One, when they had a decided edge, they were out-shot 19-17 at full strength.

Inserted to add some physicality, Smith played on the third pair with Damon Severson. He took an unnecessary roughing minor on Tyler Motte to put the Rangers on their first power play.

Although they didn’t connect, the Rangers were dangerous. The best chance came when Artemi Panarin was all set up for a one-timer from the left circle. The shot looked to deflect off Vitek Vanecek and then the crossbar. Mika Zibanejad had a strong one-timer from the right side denied by Vanecek, who certainly made enough big saves. He was particularly sharp in stopping all 14 Rangers shots a busy first.

That first man-advantage should’ve been a warning to the Devils to stay out of the penalty box. They never got the message. Instead, they paid the price for undisciplined penalties in the offensive zone.

When there was play at even strength, the line of Filip Chytil, Alexis Lafreniere, and Kaapo Kakko spent some time in the Devils zone. They continue to work hard by winning board battles. Lafreniere wasn’t shy about throwing his weight around. He had a nice hit on Dougie Hamilton, who so far has been shut out in two games. He only had one shot on goal and was minus-two.

Following a Shesterkin save on Haula on the first Devils power play, he won a draw against Barclay Goodrow. Palat and Severson played catch. Then Palat found room to get off a wrist shot that McLeod deflected for a rebound. Haula pounced on the loose puck to give the Devils the lead at 11:44.

With the home crowd into it, they looked for more. However, Hamilton missed wide, and Meier was stopped by Shesterkin.

The Rangers responded with a strong shift from the first line. Vanecek made good stops on Kreider twice and then Panarin. He was much better in this game despite the final stat line.

Hughes tested Shesterkin in transition. He stood tall. On another effective shift by the third line, Lafreniere had the puck in the slot. But he fired high over the top.

As the period was wound down, Bastian took an unnecessary penalty in the offensive zone when he boarded Ryan Lindgren from behind with 42 seconds left. As the period ended with a Zibanejad tip-in try missing, he got into a scrum with John Marino. During it, Adam Fox came over to play peacemaker. Instead, they called him for a tacky, roughing minor with no time remaining. He couldn’t believe the call. No one could.

Instead of remaining on the power play to start the second period, the Rangers instead played four-on-four until Bastian’s penalty expired. Early on, Hughes got two chances but was unable to score. Jesper Bratt also missed.

A few minutes later, it was Shesterkin who made the big save to deny Hughes. In transition where he’s most dangerous, Hughes gained the Rangers blue line easily. He then cut in and fired a laser ticketed for the upper portion of the net. But a quick reacting Shesterkin got his glove up to keep it out. That save swung the momentum. If Hughes scores there, the Devils are up 2-0. Who knows what happens.

On the next shift, the Rangers drew even. Following a Kevin Bahl turnover, Fox played catch with Ryan Lindgren. He then made a nice drop for Vladimir Tarasenko. He drove a wicked wrist shot past a screened Vanecek high glove to tie the game at 5:53. Vincent Trocheck took Vanecek’s eyes away. That made it two goals in two games for Tarasenko. He’s certainly impressed Gerard Gallant.

On the following shift, Kakko had two chances. After a backhand went wide, he let go of a wrist shot from out that Vanecek held. That showed confidence. He’s definitely starting to get it. The more aggressive approach by a player who’s been the butt of jokes by Devils fans would later get rewarded.

Following a Lafreniere hit on Hughes that made it 2020 top pick on 2019 top pick, Ryan Graves sent a backhand wide. You could say that summed up how the game went. Especially in the second period.

With the game still tied, Panarin made a slick move to draw a slashing minor on Miles Wood, who showed frustration with the call. It was a penalty. But I definitely would agree that Panarin sold it. That penalty would prove costly.

Following an early Marino clear off the draw, the Rangers number one unit went to work. After one Kreider miss from in tight, Zibanejad worked the puck over for Kane. Having already gotten more confidence by getting a couple of shots on goal, he made a good read by taking a shot from the middle that Kreider tipped in for his third of the series at 9:57. All on the power play.

On the following shift, the Devils had some puck possession in the Rangers’ end. After a pair of hits from Trouba on Bastian, he knocked down Timo Meier without the puck to go off for interference.

However, the Devils failed miserably on the power play. In particular, the Rangers’ penalty killers were very aggressive with Hughes, who had a giveaway that led to an easy clear. Both Trocheck and Braden Schneider finished checks on him.

Hughes has found it harder in the playoffs. He was a bit more active finishing with six shots and 13 attempts but also was credited with four giveaways. That’s nine in two games.

With the Rangers up a goal, Meier lost his discipline by holding Zibanejad. That allowed them to cash in again on the man-advantage. With the Devils struggling to contain the power play, they keep leaving Kreider wide open in front. A bad recipe.

On what was a simple play where Kane received a pass from Fox, he waited until he had enough room to send a pass down low for a Kreider redirection that took a funny bounce off of Vanecek’s right arm and went in to make it 3-1 with exactly four minutes left in the period.

The puck was headed wide. But Vanecek had it go off his arm and in. It was the only bad goal he allowed. Either way, that made it three consecutive goals for the Blueshirts in a dominant second that saw them hold the Devils to five shots.

In danger of going down two games to none with the next two at MSG starting Saturday, the Devils made a strong push in the third period. They really carried most of the play.

On the first shift, Bratt had a deflection go off the goalpost just 13 seconds in. If that tip-in goes in, it’s a different game. That close to making things interesting.

After a close call from Tarasenko on the opposite end, the Devils kept coming. Following an icing, they pressed the attack. On some sustained pressure, Marino sailed a backhand wide from close distance. Bratt was then stopped twice. Shesterkin also denied a Meier tip-in.

While he was getting it done, the Rangers took their opportunities when they presented themselves. That included a good Zibanejad shot right on Vanecek.

As Ruff shortened up his bench by mixing up his lines that included an effective McLeod, the Blueshirts continued to remain patient. They countered. Both Tarasenko and Chytil missed wide on opportunities.

With the Devils taking more risks offensively by pinching their defense, they eventually got burned. On a smart defensive play by an aggressive Kane on Bratt, he stole the puck and broke in on a two-on-one.

With Marino taking away the pass, Kane calmly faked and then whipped a backhand past Vanecek top shelf for his first postseason goal as a Ranger. It was the 53rd of his career. That made it a three-goal game with 13:26 remaining. The goal was unassisted.

That really took the wind out of the Devils’ sails. They still continued to push. But you never got the sense they’d get any closer. They couldn’t. They simply were outclassed.

In what amounted to his best game of his young postseason career, Kakko put the exclamation point on the victory. He had come close earlier. This time, he took a Chytil centering feed and beat Vanecek from directly in front for his first of the series.

Kakko took punishment in this game. In a shift much earlier in the contest, he parked himself in front of a long Lafreniere turnaround shot that Vanecek handled. He took some abuse. That’s how he must play. He also made a few good defensive plays by coming back in his end. Although the media selected him as the game’s first star, I went differently. Kakko definitely deserves the credit he’s receiving.

With it now 5-1, things got a bit hectic. Fourteen seconds following Kakko’s goal, a big scrum ensued. During it, Schneider and McLeod squared off. It was a good scrap with blows landed by each.

Misconducts were handed out. Barclay Goodrow, Mikkola, Jimmy Vesey, and Tyler Motte were sent packing. On the Devils side, Bastian, Wood, Bahl, and Smith exited early. McLeod received two for roughing while Goodrow also got two for interference. That kept the teams at even strength. It didn’t last long.

Eighteen seconds later, Meier cross-checked Fox. He received the additional misconduct along with Fox, who got some extra rest for Game Three. That’s not a bad thing even if he waved off the call by Wes McCauley. He really didn’t do much. He should be fresh when the Hudson rivals face off at The Garden on Saturday night.

The game was over. Whatever happened afterward didn’t matter. When the final buzzer sounded, the Rangers came over to congratulate Shesterkin, who was all smiles.

It wasn’t like that for the Devils. They might’ve played for the final time at home. Unless they can make some big adjustments, it could be over much quicker. We’ll see what happens.

For the game’s three stars, I had to go with one defensive player who had a big effect on the game. That was Trouba. He was everywhere. You felt his physical presence through the TV screen. The other two were Kreider and Kane.

https://twitter.com/BattleOfHudson/status/1649246207313674240?t=iWU7gTFhekpsL1hDOqqx4g&s=19

Postgame Notes: After falling behind 1-0, the Rangers scored five unanswered in the win. … With two more assists, Fox is up to six helpers in the first two games. He’s continuing to make history.

Shesterkin made 22 saves on 23 shots. He’s allowed only two goals on 49 shots so far. … Vanecek made 25 saves on 30 shots. Even though he allowed five, only one was on him. His team didn’t play well. They melted down. Undisciplined penalties and coverage issues continue to be the difference in the series… Will Lindy Ruff consider starting Akira Schmid for Game Three? He’s unproven but also is only 22.

Key Statistics

SOG: NYR 30 (Kane/Kreider 5) NJD 23 (Hughes 6)

Total Attempts: NYR 57 NJD 59

Hits: NYR 39 (Trouba 8) NJD 39 (Meier 7)

Blocks: NYR 16 (Trouba 3) NJD 7 (Severson 3)

Giveaways: NYR 6 NJD 13 (Hughes 4)

Face-offs: NYR 26 (Chytil 5-5/Goodrow 4-4)

NJD 33 (Haula 9-5, McLeod 8-5, Hischier 12-10)

Posted in Battle Of Hudson, Devils, NHL Playoffs, NYRangers | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Devils make lineup changes for Game Two

Tonight, it’s Game Two of the Battle of Hudson at The Prudential Center in Newark. Unlike Tuesday, the start time is 7:30 EST.

The Rangers lead the best of seven first round series, one game to none. They thoroughly outplayed the Devils to take Game One, 5-1. Special teams played a big role. They killed off all four Devils’ power plays without allowing a shot. The Blueshirts went 2 for 3 on a pair of Chris Kreider power play goals.

Although the Devils out-shot the Rangers 28-16 at five-on-five to create a few good scoring chances, including a couple for Nico Hischier and one dangerous opportunity for Jack Hughes, it wasn’t enough. They only had five high danger chances for the game.

Not surprisingly, coach Lindy Ruff has made some changes to his lineup. If the morning skate is any indication, it looks like the top two scoring lines will have a different look. Timo Meier was with Hischier and Dawson Mercer. Hughes is between Ondrej Palat and Jesper Bratt.

That means Tomas Tatar has been moved down to the third line. He was lined up with Erik Haula and Miles Wood. Wood was elevated from the checking line. That line consists of Mike McLeod, Nathan Bastian, and Yegor Sharangovich.

More of a scoring threat than Jesper Boqvist, Sharangovich is a good skater with a dangerous shot. He also plays shorthanded. Although he had a down third season posting 13 goals and 17 assists in 75 games, Sharangovich scored two shorthanded goals. During the season series, he scored twice versus the Rangers.

It should be noted that he’s fared well over his career against the Blueshirts. In 16 total games, he has six goals and five assists.

That’s why I’m not shocked that Ruff would insert him. I had a feeling he’d replace Boqvist for what could be a must win game for the Devils. They don’t want to fall behind by two games with the next two shifting to Manhattan.

Everything else for the Devils looks the same. The defensive pairs remain intact. Vitek Vanecek gets a chance to respond to a tough first game where he gave up four goals on 22 shots. Here’s how they’ll line up.

Meier-Hischier-Mercer

Palat-Hughes-Bratt

Wood-Haula-Tatar

Sharangovich-McLeod-Bastian

Siegenthaler-Hamilton

Graves-Marino

Bahl-Severson

Vanecek

Schmid/Blackwood

UPDATE: Ruff has also decided to make a change to his D. Veteran Brendan Smith is in for Jonas Siegenthaler. He will play on the third pair with Damon Severson. Here’s the reprised D pairs:

Bahl-Hamilton

Graves-Marino

Smith-Severson

After winning the first game, Gerard Gallant was pleased with his team’s effort. They were able to limit the Devils’ transition by minimizing space. They managed the puck well. When under pressure, they blocked 23 shots.

Igor Shesterkin was able to see every shot. He made 27 saves. Figure the Devils to drive the net more. They’ll be desperate.

The Blueshirts will need more than 16 shots at five-on-five. They can’t expect to rely on their power play. Of the four lines, it was the play of Filip Chytil, Alexis Lafreniere, and Kaapo Kakko that was most effective at even strength. Gallant rewarded them late. That led to Chytil’s empty netter.

The checking line centered by Barclay Goodrow was strong. He, Jimmy Vesey, and Tyler Motte did a good job. They all play roles on the penalty kill with Goodrow standing out in Game One. They also created one great scoring chance, but Vanecek stoned Motte.

There shouldn’t be any changes for tonight. Figure the Rangers to line up as they did on Tuesday.

Kreider-Zibanejad-Kane

Panarin-Trocheck-Tarasenko

Lafreniere-Chytil-Kakko

Vesey-Goodrow-Motte

Lindgren-Fox

Miller-Trouba

Mikkola-Schneider

Shesterkin

Halak

Posted in Devils, Game Preview, NYRangers | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Rangers take Game One with a strong effort to bedevil Devils 5-1, lead series 1-0

Tonight, the Rangers taught the Devils a playoff lesson. Ready from the beginning of this seventh installment of the Battle of Hudson, they skated, scored, checked diligently, and got better goaltending to take Game One over the Devils, 5-1 before 16,514 at The Prudential Center in Newark.

Playing their first postseason game in five years, the Devils were outclassed by the more experienced Rangers. They won the battle of special teams by a significant margin. While the Devils couldn’t even muster a shot on Igor Shesterkin in four attempts, the Rangers went 2 for 3 on thanks to identical power play goals from the game’s first star, Chris Kreider.

That was established very early in Game One. Vincent Trocheck reached in and tripped up Jonas Siegenthaler behind the Devils net to go off for tripping 75 seconds in. He was bailed out by a strong penalty kill work from his teammates.

The four-man Rangers shorthanded unit outworked the Devils five-man unit. When they did get opportunities, they missed the net. Jack Hughes went high and wide twice. Dougie Hamilton also shot over the top. A big part of it was how well the Blueshirts defended the middle of the ice. They took passing seams away and kept their rivals to the perimeter.

It was the work of Barclay Goodrow that was noticeable during the first period when the Rangers were penalized three different times. He was making key defensive plays, blocking shots (3), and winning face-offs (7-for-11). When he wasn’t, he was closing in on attacking Devils to make it difficult.

While the home team struggled in front of a boisterous crowd that was mixed in with both Devils and Rangers fans, they were having trouble getting anything going. On a rare forecheck by the BMW Line, Trocheck made a key clear after he came on for Filip Chytil. That allowed the second line to transition up ice to get the first goal of the series.

Artemi Panarin made a pass across for K’Andre Miller. With the Devils in full scramble mode, he made a good pass for Vladimir Tarasenko in the right circle. He then patiently moved around Siegenthaler and rifled a snapshot by Vitek Vanecek for his first of the postseason at 4:58. That was the 42nd of his career. The first 41 came with the Blues, including 11 during their run to the Stanley Cup in 2019.

Following the goal, Adam Fox got called for a weak hold on Jesper Bratt. He mildly protested as he went to the box. But it was again the aggressive penalty killing unit that dominated. In fact, before the Devils got a shot on Shesterkin, Mika Zibanejad tested Vanecek shorthanded but was denied.

When they did attempt shots, they missed the target. Nico Hischier had a tip-in go wide. He then absorbed a tough hit from Ryan Lindgren, who played well. He even later scored his third career postseason goal. The Devils did a lot of retreating on their second power failure. I don’t think PSE&G sponsored it. That’s how out of sync it was.

By the time Tomas Tatar got a shot on Shesterkin, which he easily handled, over eight minutes had expired. It took the Devils 8:14 to register their first shot. They didn’t have much going. That’s how bottled up they were by a determined Blueshirts, who were disciplined defensively.

The Rangers came very close to making it a two-goal lead. After spending some time in the Devils end, Trocheck had a point blank shot stopped by Vanecek. With some chaos in front, he was completely down and out. Lindgren fired what looked like the second goal. But his shot rang off the crossbar. Vanecek then somehow stoned Panarin on a rebound.

In the postseason, penalties are magnified. Particularly when they’re in the offensive zone. Miles Wood got nabbed for reaching in and grabbing Panarin. That put the Rangers on their first power play. They couldn’t have drawn it up any better.

Off a face-off, Fox and Panarin played catch. Then Fox got the puck up top and took a wrist shot that Kreider easily tipped in for his first of the game at 9:30 to make it 2-0.

The goal allowed him to pass Rangers legend Rod Gilbert for the most postseason goals in franchise history. It was his 35th as a Ranger. When he later added another on what else but another power play redirect, Kreider didn’t have anything to say about the achievement. Instead, he focused on getting Game Two, which he called very tough. Team guy.

At one point, the Rangers led in shots 8-1. They were the harder team. The attention to detail was evident. By limiting what the faster Devils like to do in transition, they made it difficult.

Hughes struggled for most of his first postseason game with turnovers. He had five giveaways. That was mostly due to forcing passes through the middle. It’s the same East West style that can plague Panarin when he’s not simplifying the game. He also took some hits from the Rangers defense. During a shift, he delivered one of his own on Kreider, who easily absorbed it. He’s much stronger.

Despite being in control, the Rangers let the Devils hang around. They began to find their game in the second half of the first period. Following a couple of blocks by Tyler Motte, Erik Haula got a shot right on Shesterkin. The gritty center was noticeable throughout. He mixed it up by delivering four hits. He plays with energy and at times is used by Lindy Ruff to take draws for Hughes. However, he had a good night in the circle, finishing 7 and 7.

Nico Hischier woke up the Devils contingent with some aggressive play to generate quality scoring chances. During a strong shift, he was stopped twice by a sharp Shesterkin. He was their best player by a wide margin. For the game, he finished with five shots in eight attempts and had three takeaways.

His work created more opportunities for teammates. But both Damon Severson and Dawson Mercer went wide. Hischier tested Shesterkin again, but he continued to make the key stops.

Following Filip Chytil having a shot blocked by Severson, Mike McLeod was stopped by Shesterkin with over two minutes left. His line with Miles Wood and Nathan Bastian was active. They were more effective than some of the star talent, including Timo Meier, who was pretty quiet for most of the night. Meier would draw a questionable, high-sticking minor on a frustrated Braden Schneider.

It was again the Rangers penalty kill that got the job done. Kreider made sure to hit Hughes on the Devils’ third power play. Jacob Trouba also let Meier know he was there. He picked his spots during the game.

Despite holding a 10-7 edge in shots, the Rangers had to know the Devils were coming. They definitely weren’t the same during the first half of the second period. It was the home team that adjusted their style. Taking away the neutral zone, they began to tilt the ice.

For a while, it was the Devils forcing turnovers and carrying the action. Following a couple of early shots from Haula and Jesper Boqvist, the physicality picked up. More on their heels, the Rangers finished checks.

That included Alexis Lafreniere, who had a couple of good hits. Although he didn’t get on the score sheet, the former top pick was noticeable throughout. He had a good takeaway on Hughes and was strong. So, too, were 21 and over Kid Line mates Chytil and Kaapo Kakko.

On another shift, Hischier almost broke through. But he had his backhand denied by Shesterkin. He later missed a golden opportunity over the top.

The Devils continued to have the edge in territorial play. Although they were outplayed, the Rangers still did a solid job minimizing the high danger chances. Shesterkin made his biggest saves on Tatar and later Hughes, who stripped Schneider and then flew by Niko Mikkola to get in. But Shesterkin calmly made the big save.

At around the midway point, the period shifted. Following a big kick save from Vanecek to deny Motte off a Jimmy Vesey pass, in came Hughes on Shesterkin. But he wasn’t about to let the 21-year old center score. That was a big moment. It came with 7:28 remaining in the second. If Hughes scores there, everything could’ve changed. Shesterkin made 27 saves on 28 shots. That was his best.

With under six minutes left, Haula grabbed Chytil for one of those bad offensive zone penalties. Luckily, the Devils bailed him out. They also had the benefit of having a Lafreniere goal on a double deflection overturned. On a Trouba one-timer, first Chytil deflected it followed by Lafreniere, whose stick was just above crossbar height. They made the right call.

After the power play expired, Gerard Gallant made a wise decision by keeping the Kid Line out at even strength. The move paid off. Following a Chytil hit on John Marino, he helped set up a huge third goal from an unlikely source.

Chytil moved the puck up for Fox, who was exceptional in Game One, tallying four assists. Up top, he waited for Lindgren to cut towards the net. After receiving a pass from his defense partner, Lindgren waited at the very last moment to catch Vanecek just off his near goalpost. He fired a perfect shot high, short side inside the bar for his third career postseason goal to give the Blueshirts a three-goal lead with 3:03 left.

Seeing the glue of the team score was great. Lindgren provides so much for the team. He always will lay out to block shots at his own risk. He’s the definition of an unselfish player. It was nice to see him get rewarded after coming so close in the first period. Teammates were extremely happy for him.

It really was a huge goal that made it tough on the Devils. They’re known for being a great comeback team. But it’s harder to do in the playoffs when the ice becomes smaller. It’ll be interesting to see what adjustments they make for Game Two.

Subbing for Goodrow on a face-off, Motte proved why he doesn’t take them. He illegally won the draw by putting his glove over the puck and moving it back. That was an automatic delay of game minor. Like Bill Murray’s Phil character in Groundhog Day, the Devils failed miserably. I imagine Hasan will have more on that and what they did wrong.

In the third, the Devils had more shots. As expected, they held a 13-5 edge. However, nothing was getting by Shesterkin. He denied a Meier backhand early to preserve the three-goal lead.

With not much going right, Ruff tweaked his lines. Hughes had Palat on the left side with Bratt. Hischier would eventually have Meier on his line with Mercer. For most of the game, Meier was on the third line with Haula and Boqvist. That’s not the best way to utilize him. He’s a high volume shooter. He has to play in the top six for the Devils to be successful.

Although the Devils had more shots, not many threatened Shesterkin, who really deserved a shutout. It wasn’t to be.

When he needed a spark, Gallant went to Chytil, Lafreniere, and Kakko. They continued to be solid on the walls. When the game was played at five-on-five, it was that cohesive unit that got the puck in and cycled. That’s what they did so well last year and over the second half of the regular season.

Ryan Graves came close to getting the Devils on the board. But he had his long shot go off the goalpost. Shesterkin then stuffed Nathan Bastian on a wrap-around. He’d also make another save on Hughes, who improved his play in the latter stages.

A scrum that involved Severson giving Goodrow a shot nearly led to chaos. When Goodrow got up and asked him to go, he declined the fight. During that scrum, McLeod was given the only penalty for unsportsmanlike conduct, which was drawn by Motte.

Back on the man-advantage, the Blueshirts made short work of the gift. On a Patrick Kane (yes, he played) pass up top for Fox, he again sent one of those shots towards the front. Kreider was again parked in front, where he easily redirected the puck in for his 36th postseason goal. That put the game out of reach.

When you watch Kreider make those tip-ins, he makes it look easy. It isn’t. It’s a skill he works hard on in practices. There are other players who are just as good. But Kreider is probably the best net front player in the league. That’s why he’s scoring more.

With the first game basically over, the only question is, would Shesterkin get the shutout. Unfortunately, Hughes stole a puck and broke in on him. Trouba slashed him just enough from behind for the officials to reward him with a penalty shot. Even if I didn’t think it was a great call, it took away a scoring chance.

One on one, Hughes cooly skated in, faked, and then found enough real estate to beat Shesterkin with a great shot that went low inside the net. There wasn’t much room. He had a window and made it for his first career postseason goal. It was a skilled play.

Hughes’ goal came with 2:46 left in regulation. That meant Ruff lifted Vanecek for an extra attacker. Gallant decided to give his best line the assignment. That meant Chytil, Kakko, and Lafreniere. They were that good. After Fox made a defensive play to move the puck up to Kakko, he got the puck up for Chytil. He gained the red line and made no mistake scoring his first into the vacated net.

That closed the book on this game. The first chapter will show that the Rangers were the much better team. Their grit and experience showed. Now, it’s on to Game Two. The Devils should be more desperate. As Kreider noted about getting the second game in enemy territory, it should be harder.

This was a good start. Now, we find out if the Jersey side can respond. Considering what’s been happening so far in the first days of these playoffs with road teams having success, including both the Jets and Kraken winning along with the Lightning reminding the Maple Leafs that it’s the postseason, you never know.

Did anyone actually believe the Kings would come back to stun the Oilers on the first night? Road teams are 6-2 so far, with only the Bruins and Hurricanes winning Game One at home. The Stanley Cup Playoffs are different. Home ice isn’t the same advantage it used to be. It should make for some compelling Game Two’s.

For the game’s three Stars, I could’ve selected a number of players. I decided to go with the three Rangers who impacted Game One. No Fox or Lindgren.

https://twitter.com/BattleOfHudson/status/1648515423334465536?t=Jov71o-EodcOxDV8ERnzbQ&s=19

Notes: The Devils out-shot the Rangers 28-23 overall. But the Rangers went 2 for 3 on the power play on four shots. The Devils went 0 for 4 with no shots while allowing three shorthanded shots. At five-on-five, that favored the Devils 28-16. … Vanecek finished with 18 saves on 22 shots. If he struggles early in the second game, don’t be surprised to see Akira Schmid. He was the backup over Mackenzie Blackwood for last night.

KEY STATISTICS

Total Attempts: Devils 67 Rangers 45

Hits: Rangers 32 (Trouba/Vesey 4)

Devils 30 (Meier 5)

Blocks: NYR 23 (Fox 4) NJD 12 (Graves 3)

Face-offs: NJD 35 (McLeod 9-2) NYR 32 (Chytil 10-3)

Giveaways: Devils 13 (Hughes 5) Rangers 3

Posted in Battle Of Hudson, Devils, NHL Playoffs, NYRangers | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment